Guest guest Posted June 22, 2003 Report Share Posted June 22, 2003 Noel his is a quick and short response 'cause I have been off for two weeks and I have at one million emails to look at and secondly my experience is very limited. I know that different cancers have different biomarkers. E.g. PSA (prostatic specific antigen) and acid phospahatase (an enzyme) for prostate and CA153 (a protein) for certain hormonal related breast cancer. I have experience of these with my clients- very limited I fear. But what I know for sure is that there are no uniform biomarkers for different cancers. Each cancer has a specific biomarker/s - either testing for enzymes, antigens, proteins, genes etc. I am not sure about viruses. Bone cancer is normally secondary - very few are primary and most occur in adolescent. I have two clients who started with breast and then bone, one had osteomalacia (came up on QX). X-ray, CT scan, TBC bone scan, MR scan and biopsy are the usual tests. Doctors and consultants will take biomarkers seriously and since we have to work with them and we are not clinicians we should also take them seriously. Sorry Noel - not much help. keep well, azizah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2003 Report Share Posted June 23, 2003 dear noel--i am not the best one to answer your question on cancer markers--but something that is of utmost importance in working with your client is to check to see if her reactivity is normal on the varho page...my bet is that it is not. if it is not it means that her body is not even recognizing the diseased cells so it makes little or no attempt to fix it. if reactivity is not normal--go to timed therapies...then timed treatments...then run degeneration ....then the cancer therapy buttons will come up in the middle of the page...run cancer therapy...then run reactivity disease. this takes a while, but it is entirely worth it! blessings kare Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2003 Report Share Posted June 23, 2003 Thank you Azzizah, ............................................. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2003 Report Share Posted June 23, 2003 Bio markers for various cancers do not always tell the status of the cancer. One of the most important parameters is "how is the patient doing"!!! You need to know that cancer markers often elevate as the cancer is being destroyed so in this case one may get the wrong impression that the condition is worsening. Again, LISTEN TO YOUR PATIENT!!!! Castiglia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2003 Report Share Posted June 24, 2003 Keep "Zapping" those parasites... Bovine Leukemia Virus Infection and Human Breast Cancer Risk Gertrude Buehring, Ph.D.University of California, Berkeley The purpose of the research proposed here is to determine whether infection of a woman's breast tissue with bovine leukemia virus (BLV) makes it more likely that she will develop breast cancer. Our interest in this question stems from the fact that breast cancer in the mouse is caused by a virus, MMTV, which is transmitted from mother to nursing baby mice via the milk. The MMIV system provides proof that a naturally occurring cancer can be caused by a virus in a food source. Since the main source of milk for humans is cows, a bovine virus might be a likely candidate for a milk-transmitted agent of human breast cancer. Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is a cancer causing virus of cattle which can be transmitted from cow to calf via the milk. BLV commonly infects dairy and beef cattle and is found in the marketed milk and meat of these animals. Most infected cattle are healthy and are not removed from the herd. Consumption of non-pasteurized dairy products or undercooked beef could possibly allow transmission of infectious virus to humans. BLV can infect other species including sheep and goats naturally, and several species experimentally including non-human primates. BLV can also infect the cells of many species cultured in flasks, including cells from humans and other primates. We recently discovered that BLV infects the breast cells of cows naturally and causes these cells to behave more like cancer cells. This indicates that this "leukemia" virus can target more than just blood cells. Our preliminary data suggests that humans can become infected with BLV. We found 53% of the humans tested have antibodies to BLV in their blood, which is an indication of exposure to BLV. We also detected BLV proteins and DNA in human breast tissues removed by surgery, which suggests these tissues were infected by BLV. The research proposed here is to ascertain whether the presence of BLV DNA and proteins in breast tissues correlates with the patient's diagnosis of breast cancer. Breast cancer tissues from 10 women and normal tissue from 169 controls with no history of breast neoplasms will be tested by in situ-polymerase chain reaction for proviral BLV DNA and by immunohistochemistry for BLV capsid protein. The association between the presence of BLV DNA/protein and patient diagnosis will be analyzed statistically. If frequency of BLV infection is shown to be significantly different in malignant breast tissue versus normal controls, this will justify the launching of a larger prospective study designed to determine whether BLV can cause some cases of breast cancer. The ultimate impact of the project could be to reduce breast cancer incidence by preventing human infection with BLV through elimination of the virus in cattle, interception of its transmission from cattle to humans, or vaccinations of humans. There is always more to consider... Chris We have several interesting pieces available on-line: Zappers: http://www.cloud9health.com/zappers/ Reports substantiating Dr. 's claims (from the 1950's): http://www.cloud9health.com/multiple_sclerosis/ http://www.cloud9health.com/diabetes/ http://www.cloud9health.com/depression/ http://www.cloud9health.com/americancancer/ http://www.cloud9health.com/breast_milk/ http://www.cloud9health.com/viral_cancer_files/ Chemtrails: http://www.cloud9health.com/chemtrailsMicrowave Ovens: http://www.cloud9health.com/Radiation_Ovens.pdf Colloidal silver ... buy materials (anywhere) for roughly $50, to make a lifetime supply:http://www.cloud9health.com/Make_32_oz_Colloidal.doc (MS Word format 117 KB)http://www.cloud9health.com/Make_32_oz_Colloidal.pdf (Adobe PDF format 187 KB) Email: info@...Main site: http://www.cloud9health.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 25, 2003 Report Share Posted June 25, 2003 Thank you very much, that was the view/experience I thought / estimated IS there ! Noel. Re: Cancer markers Bio markers for various cancers do not always tell the status of the cancer. One of the most important parameters is "how is the patient doing"!!! You need to know that cancer markers often elevate as the cancer is being destroyed so in this case one may get the wrong impression that the condition is worsening. Again, LISTEN TO YOUR PATIENT!!!! Castiglia ............................................ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 1, 2006 Report Share Posted May 1, 2006 In a message dated 4/30/2006 3:24:14 PM Eastern Standard Time, ladybugsandbees@... writes: For over 1 year we have been fighting rising cancer marker numbers and for the first time in 4 years my Tg numbers have started to fall. Hi ...have your cancer markers begun to fall as well? Also, if I may ask, what kind of cancer? I started the iodine to help prevent a breast cancer recurrence and have found it helpful for many unexpected things. BarbF Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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